Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The odds of a thief stealing in the dead of night from someones unlocked car is vastly different from leaving your car unattended for a short period of time. My point is that an ounce of prevention would keep things like a gun from being stolen. Your situation may be different, vehicles targeted are in a suburban neighborhood or car garage where anyone can just try multiple doors to see which one was unlocked.I don't disagree but every situation is different. Can I leave my gun in a car when I'm going to the courthouse or do I not carry that day. Where I live my gun is just as secure in my truck in my driveway as it would be in my house. Do you think that if people stop leaving guns in cars then criminals won't get guns? Food for thought.
The gun is not causing further crime, the person behind the gun is causing further crime. If one prescribes to the argument against gun control that the gun is an inanimate object and that controlling inanimate objects will do nothing to prevent firearm crime....Then one also has to prescribe to the argument that no matter how one obtains a firearm, it is the individual human behind the trigger that is to blame and the actual firearm has nothing to do with it.
Its really not an either or argument, an inanimate object is an inanimate object, no matter the nuance of the circumstance. Is leaving an unsecured firearm in a vehicle a bad idea, sure....is the person that had their vehicle broken into and firearm stolen responsible...no.
Its not wrong at all, but the govt of New York was blaming the gun and gun owner and I think that is where that stems from, and people tend to attack and blame the victim of the theft when things are stolen from vehicles instead of attacking the criminal. Happens time and time again. While you can do things to mitigate theft from your vehicle, at the end of the day, it is not the fault of the victim.Is it so wrong to limit what is possibly stolen?
Its not wrong at all, but the govt of New York was blaming the gun and gun owner and I think that is where that stems from, and people tend to attack and blame the victim of the theft when things are stolen from vehicles instead of attacking the criminal. Happens time and time again. While you can do things to mitigate theft from your vehicle, at the end of the day, it is not the fault of the victim.
That's BS. Knowing that there are people that will steal your bike or your gun and leaving it accessible to them anyways means you are irresponsible and hold some of the blame.Its not your fault if you leave a bike in your front yard and someone steals it, its the criminals fault. Can people do something to help prevent the criminal (who is actually at fault) from stealing it...sure...but it is still the criminals fault.
You quit taking your meds didn't you?
Dude, I'm too shallow to be thin skinned. It takes a lot more than your little temper tantrums to bother me. Keep tossing insults. I'll sleep just as well tonight as I did before I knew you existed. Bless your mean little heart.Hurts when it hits close?